Zeppelin seems a very rare case where the band flat out said “sorry, we can’t do it anymore” following a member’s death and the remaining members played infrequently together following. Some bands, like Joy Division for one example just changed their name and continued. But most (Skynyrd, Who, AC/DC, et al.)just replaced the deceased member(s) and continued usually without the same presence.

« Last Edit: April 05, 2019, 11:24:53 PM by TheHighwayMan394 »

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It sucks that you think where I’m from is whack, but as long as that’s enough to keep your ass from coming back

Zeppelin seems a very rare case where the band flat out said “sorry, we can’t do it anymore” following a member’s death and the remaining members played infrequently together following. Some bands, like Joy Division for one example just changed their name and continued. But most (Skynyrd, Who, AC/DC, et al.)just replaced the deceased member(s) and continued usually without the same presence.

Skynryd did not continue right away as it was years since they reunited. Ditto for Little Feat who made the comeback with Craig Fuller in 1987 long after Lowell George died which is why they went on a hiatus. Even with Fuller gone and Shawn Murphy at the front the band still made out despite the sound with a female lead over the male vocals of George and Fuller.

Now the Grateful Dead could have went on without Garcia, but IMO the Dead without Jerry is no dead at all.

Now the Grateful Dead could have went on without Garcia, but IMO the Dead without Jerry is no dead at all.

I think the various bands that have sprung up around former Dead members are perfectly good bands. They are not the Grateful Dead, you are right, but good nevertheless.

I'm also almost positive that the remaining Dead members have played together, maybe even put out an album.

They've put out a couple of live albums, but there was a final studio album that was in the works that never was released. All have put out a couple of solo albums with side projects. The most current incarnation that is a direct descendent is Dead & Company, which is Weir, the drummers (Hart and Kreutzmann), and John Mayer assuming the Jerry role. This replaces Furthur, which was Weir, Lesh, and others. The core got together for 5 shows (2 in Santa Clara and 3 in Chicago) in 2015 called Fare The Well with Trey Anastacio of Phish taking the Jerry parts. I've heard some of Dead and Company's live recordings. Weir's voice isn't quite what it used to be, but Mayer's guitar playing is pretty solid, though not quite the legendary level Jerry gave us.

The Who may have continued to be successful after Keith Moon died in 1978 (although I thought they should have called it quits), but after John Entwistle passed away in 2002, they definitely should have shut it down.

Speaking of ex-Who drummers, original drummer Doug Sandom died February 27, one day after his 89th birthday. Doug who? He was their drummer during their first record company auditions, but was fired when the producers said he was too old (34 at the time). Moon joined a few weeks later.

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"Oh, so you hate your job? Well, why didn't you say so? There's a support group for that. It's called "EVERYBODY!" They meet at the bar." -- Drew Carey

The Who may have continued to be successful after Keith Moon died in 1978 (although I thought they should have called it quits), but after John Entwistle passed away in 2002, they definitely should have shut it down.

Speaking of ex-Who drummers, original drummer Doug Sandom died February 27, one day after his 89th birthday. Doug who? He was their drummer during their first record company auditions, but was fired when the producers said he was too old (34 at the time). Moon joined a few weeks later.